Gold Crash: What It’s Not Telling Us

8 comments

Posted on 16th April 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

, ,

Very balanced assessment of the gold crash. The key takeaways are that the gold correction is close to the end, but the stock market correction hasn’t yet begun. The doofuses on CNBC won’t be cackling so much when the stock market plunges 10% in a day. Deflationary collapses are always so much fun. Too bad the Obamanistas and the Federal Reserve money printers are out of bullets. There are no $800 billion porkulus programs coming down the pike and Bennie printing $150 billion per month is not in the cards. Get ready for an even bumpier ride.

Submitted by Lance Roberts of Street Talk Live,

The recent plunge in gold prices below $1500 an ounce has suddenly awoken, well, just about everyone.  The “gold bugs” are yelling that it is a conspiracy theory by the Fed while the stock market bulls say it is a sign that the Fed has achieved its goal of creating economic growth.  Unfortunately, both arguments, while great for headlines, are wrong.

In August of 2011, during the original debt ceiling debate, gold spiked sharply to just a tad over $1800 an ounce.   In my weekly missive that month I answered the question of “Should I Buy Gold Now?” stating: 

 
 

“In a one word answer…Are you kidding me – Gold has never been this overbought before and if you ever want to be the poster child of buying at the top – this is it.  Okay, not really a one word answer but here is my point. Gold is currently in what is known as a ‘Parabolic Spike’. These do not end well typically as it represents a ‘panic’ buying spree.  Therefore, if you currently OWN gold I would recommend beginning to take some profits in it.”

At that time i showed four potential levels of retracement.

Gold-Newsletter082611-041513

The advice at that time fell on deaf ears as investors feared that the government was going to default on its debt and the economy was going to plunged back into a deep recession.  Of course, anyone paying attention to the 10-year treasury rate, as it plunged to then record lows, would have understood that a default was not going to be the case. 

Of course, the debt ceiling was eventually raised and disaster postponed due to last minute negotiations.  The release of that fear, and subsequent interventions by Central Banks globally, led to a rotation out of the fear trade which began the process of a gold price reversion. 

Parabolic spikes in asset prices always lead to price reversions.  Whether it is gold, oil, or the price of Apple stock – excesses to one extreme lead to excesses in the other.  It is often in the final leg of this reversion process that investors “give up” on the previous long held beliefs and throw in the towel.  This action is known as “capitulation” and tends to be a buying opportunity for astute investors at some point. 

The chart below shows the long term price of gold relative to the percentage deviation in price from gold’s 34-week moving average.

Gold-deviation-34wk-price-041513

As shown – the current deviation is the largest since the early 1980′s as Reagan and Volker set out to break the back of inflation and spur economic growth.   Deviations of this magnitude are generally met with fairly sharp positive price corrections from such extreme oversold conditions.

I have noted on the chart above the three previous times that negative deviations were roughly 20% or larger.  The difference this time, as opposed to the 80-90′s, is that the economy is not about to launch into a sustained rate of organic growth driven by falling interest rates and inflation.  In fact, all of the recent economic data, as shown by the composite economic index below, shows quite the opposite.

STA-EOCI-Index-040513

As stated previously – readings below 30 on this composite index have generally been associated with recessions in the past.  This is why the idea that the drop in gold prices is due to a burgeoning economic outlook is short sighted.  There is no evidence of such being the case.  Take a look at the annual rate of change in personal consumption expenditures which makes up 70% of the gross domestic product report.  

PCE-Real-vs-Nominal-041513

The economy, along with housing, has been supported by massive interventions by the Federal Reserve, artificially low interest rates and fiscal policies to stabilize the economy.  Without these supports there would be no economic growth at all.   However, even with all of those supports, economic strength is struggling currently.

Therefore, gold is not selling off due to any belief that an organic economic recovery is underway.  That concept is just as far-fetched as the Federal Reserve conspiracy theories that have abounded in the blogosphere as of late.  The simple truth is that gold is completing a journey that it began nearly two years ago which can be summed up in four words:

“Reversion To The Mean.”

As we have discussed previously using the example of a rubber band – physics state that if we stretch a band as far as possible in one direction, when released, it will travel beyond the mean.  The same is true from over extensions in the financial markets.

The chart below shows the price of gold and the times that it has reach 3-standard deviations above the 34-week moving average.  Such extensions have always led to reversions in price.  The bigger the extension has been on the upside the bigger the reversion has been. 

Gold-3stddev-34week-041513

The current correction is well within the normalcy of extreme price movements.  It also suggests that the current correction is likely closer to its end than its beginning.

There are plenty of signs that tell us that the global economy is not getting stronger but quite the opposite.  Commodities are weak, interest rates are falling and economic activity is slowing.  While gold is currently selling off sharply it isn’t because the global economic intervention experiment has worked – it is more of a function of tax related selling, margin calls and short term market dynamics.   These will pass in fairly short order.

Interest-Rate-SP500-040513

In the meantime – the real concern for investors should not be the fall of gold – but the overall stock market.  With investors fully allocated to the markets – the lurking correction therein is potentially far more dangerous to portfolios than the current fall in gold simply due to weighting differences.  The decline in interest rates is telling a much different story than what economists and analysts are currently predicting as shown in the chart above.

With earnings season in full swing my suspicion is that even with earnings hurdles moved substantially lower in recent weeks it may not be enough to offset the softening global economy.  Of course, then again, maybe this is what gold, commodities and interest rates are really telling us.

THE HOUSING RECOVERY FRAUD EXPLAINED

3 comments

Posted on 23rd January 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

,

Lance Roberts explains how the MSM bullshit about the blossoming housing recovery has painted a false picture. There is no recovery and 2013 will reveal it to be a Big Lie.

The Media Is Misreporting The Housing Turnaround Story

Imagine that your financial advisor called you up one day and said:

“Great news…your investment portfolio gained 1%  in January which is an annualized return of 12%.  However, we have to  subtract .05% from that return because historically January’s return has only  been 0.95% since 1950.  This brings our seasonally adjusted return to  11.4%.”

Of course, after the SEC  pays a visit to the advisor to correct his performance reporting measures, the  simple reality is that “what you see is what you get.” 

While this example may seem a little farfetched – this is exactly what  happens with a variety of economic reports that are released by various  government agencies and member organization/lobby groups.  The reasoning  for such data manipulations is not a nefarious scheme; but rather an attempt to  smooth what is normally very volatile data.  This is particularly the case  with housing related data.   As an example the chart below shows the data  released by the Census Bureau for housing starts on both a non-seasonally and  seasonally adjusted basis.

 

As you can see there is an extreme amount of volatility in the  non-seasonally adjusted data.  The Census Bureau takes the reported monthly  housing starts data and annualizes it.  Therefore, if 10,000 homes were  started in January it is reported as 120,000 on an annualized basis.  Then  a seasonal adjustment factor is added to account for seasonal weather  and demand patterns.   For example let’s take a look at the housing start  data that was just released for December of 2012.

The headlines read that “Housing starts surged by 12.1% in  December proving that the housing recovery is back.”  In reality  the numbers were as follows:

  • December starts:  61,500 (down 2.8% from  November)
  • Annualized December starts:  738,000
  • Reported seasonally adjusted December starts:  954,000  (Up  12.1% from November)
  • Seasonal adjustment to December starts:  +216,000

Historically, the data smoothing methodology was “close  enough”  and the variations were, more or less, worked out over  time.  However, in the current economic environment, the seasonal  adjustment process may be overstating that actual activity that is occurring  within the underlying economy.  With housing currently making a very small  contribution to overall economic activity, just slightly more than 2.5% as shown  in the chart below, the difference between  the “real” economic impact of 61,500 homes being started  nationwide versus 954,000, of which 216,000 were a mathematical seasonal  adjustment, can be quite dramatic.

 

However, as in our financial advisor analogy, when it comes to the impact  of the “housing recovery” on the economy “what we  see is what we get” and nothing else.  Therefore, in the quest to  determine what the actual contribution to the overall economy that housing will  provide, we need to look at the full process of housing on an actual  basis.

The Housing Process Activity Index (HAPI)

The housing process begins with the permit to build a home which leads to the  start of the construction process, the completion and the sell to an end buyer.    The reason for looking at all four components is that many permits that  are filed do not result in a start, many starts do not lead to completions and  there are many completions that remain unsold for quite some time.

The Housing Process Activity Index (HAPI) takes into account all four  variables.  However, instead of utilizing seasonal adjustment factors and  annualizing the monthly activity, as with the Census Bureau, I use a 12-month  average of the actual monthly activity to smooth the data.   The chart below shows the HAPI as compared to its individual HAPI  subcomponents.

 

This tells us quite a different story than what the media is currently  reporting.   On average over the last twelve months there were:

  • 67,000 permits for new privately owned housing
  • 65,000 housing starts each month
  • 54,300 completions
  • 30,900 sales

What this tells is that out of the 67,000 permits, on average, that were  pulled each month to build a home only 30,900 actually wound up being completed  and sold.  This is a very different picture than the recent months  seasonally adjusted data that showed:

  • 903,000 permits
  • 954,000 starts
  • 686,000 completions
  • 377,000 sales (as of November)

It is important to note that I am NOT contesting the manner in  which the Census Bureau reports its housing data.  I am,  however, suggesting that the method used in the current economic environment may  be overstating the actual activity that is occurring.  By smoothing the  non-seasonally adjusted data using a monthly average we see a very different  perspective to the data.  The HAPI begins to potentially answer the  questions of why housing remains a low economic contributor and why construction  employment is still mired at very low levels.

 

While housing has improved somewhat from the post-crisis lows it is  far weaker than the majority of headlines actually suggest.  Housing  inventory has declined sharply from its peaks that have primarily been driven by  speculative all-cash investors turning lower priced homes, and buying homes in  bulk from banks, to be turned into rentals.

 

Furthermore, a large portion of the “housing  start” story has been in the multi-family apartment space.   As shown in the chart below the percentage of apartment starts, 5-units or  more, is currently at some of the highest levels on record and has surpassed the  peak seen in the last recession.

 

Currently, there are still more than 25% of homeowners underwater which  limits their ability to move, refinance or sell their homes.  However, as  prices rise, there are two issues that begin to attack the housing story:   1) As prices reach levels where underwater homeowners can sell they will  likely do so out of a psychology need to escape the “trap,” which will bring a  large supply of homes back onto the market, and; 2) rising prices will  eventually erode the profitability of buying homes for rentals which will bring  the speculative frenzy that has been the driver of the recent recovery to a  halt.

The housing recovery is ultimately a story of the “real” unemployment  situation which still shows that roughly a quarter of the home buying  cohort are unemployed and living at home with their parents.  The remaining  members of the home buying, household formation, contingent are employed but at  lower ends of the pay scale and are choosing to rent due to budgetary  considerations.  Also, we should not discount the psychology of home  ownership has dramatically changed since the crash as many of  the “millennials” saw the financial damage their parents  suffered and are opting out of taking such a perceived risk.

As I  stated recently the optimism over the housing recovery has gotten well  ahead of the underlying fundamentals.  The overarching problem is that the  housing market that is almost exclusively dependent on the continued push to  artificially suppress interest rates combined with massive amounts of direct  stimulus, and incentives, to bailout current homeowners and banks.  This  intervention is causing an artificial supply suppression which is likely to  create a backlash in the future as the current supply/demand conditions are  unsustainable.

While the belief was that the Government, and Fed’s, interventions would  ignite the housing market creating an self-perpetuating recovery in the economy  – it did not turn out that way.  Today, these repeated intrusions are  having a diminished rate of return and the risk now is that interest rates rise  shutting potential homebuyers out of the market.  It is likely that in 2013  housing will begin to stabilize at historically low levels and the economic  contribution will remain fairly weak.  The downside risk to that view is  the impact of higher taxes, stagnant wage growth, re-defaults of the 6-million  modifications and workouts, elevated defaults of underwater homeowners and a  slowdown of speculative investment due to reduced profit margins.  While  many hopes have been pinned on the 2012 stimulus fueled, China investing, and  supply deprived housing recovery as “the” driver of  economic growth in 2013 – the data suggest that may be quite a bit of wishful  thinking.

Read more:  http://www.streettalklive.com/daily-x-change/1468-the-real-housing-recovery-story.html#ixzz2IqTJD78P

YES VIRGINIA, THE GOVERNMENT HAS BEEN LYING TO YOU ABOUT INFLATION

6 comments

Posted on 20th December 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

Lance Roberts does a great job exposing the lies our government boldly uses to obscure the true level of inflation. I’ve been harping on this subject for years. There is no better proof than the bullshit CPI figures put out last week by your government owners. They had the balls to tell you that your living expenses only went up by 1.8% in the last year. The largest portion of the CPI is a made up number called Owners Equivelant Rent which is supposed to measure the cost to live in a house or apartment. This morning, another group of lying bastards – the National Association of Realtors – announced that existing home sales rose and that prices are 10% higher than last year. Other organizations have reported that rents for apartments are up 6% in the last year.

DRUM ROLL PLEASE

The government says that Owners equivalent rent has gone up only 2.1% in the last year. If home prices and rents are rising between 6% and 10%, how can this inflation measure be up by only 2.1%? The simple answer is that it can’t. The government is lying. Inflation is running above 5%. Read below for more detail. Believe no one. Question everything.

http://www.bls.gov/cpi/cpid1211.pdf

Guest Post: Why Reported Inflation Seems Different Than Reality

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Submitted by Tyler Durdenon 12/20/2012 12:45 -0500

Via Lance Roberts of StreetTalkLive,

The subject of inflation has remained an emotionally charged topic of debate over the last several years.  As rising prices for individuals, and businesses, has negatively impacted their prosperity; reported inflation has remained at very low levels.  With the Fed pumping trillions of dollars into financial system the fear of much higher inflation, as the dollar is debased, has caused gold prices to soar in recent years.  As we will discuss momentarily, the issues surrounding government spending, and the massive deficit, has brought the topic of inflation to the forefront of the political debate.

However, a bit of history is needed for context.  The government produces a measure of inflation called the consumer price index (CPI) which is generally broken down into two reports:  Headline and Core.  The only difference between the two measures is that the core reading strips out the volatile food and energy components.  It is this core reading that economists, and the Fed, focus on much to the aggravation of average consumers who quickly point to the fact the food and energy are big part of their daily lives.

The sole purpose in measuring inflation is to help businesses, individuals and government adjust their financial planning for the impact of inflation.  Inflation erodes future purchasing power, and decreases economic prosperity, if not accurately accounted for.  The accuracy of measuring inflation, and accounting for it properly, is essential to long term economic prosperity.   

The original calculation of CPI, which measured the change in the cost of an identical fixed basket of goods priced at prevailing market costs each period, worked reasonably well for the intended purpose into the early-1980’s.  However, as the pressure of increasing deficits weighed on political parties, the need to find solutions to reducing spending, without actually cutting spending, led to several substantial changes in the calculation of inflation. 

Shortly after Clinton entered the White House the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) altered the calculation of inflation by changing the weighting of goods in the CPI fixed basket.  Then, over subsequent years, the method of weighting the underlying components was changed from a straight arithmetic weighting method to geometric.  The primary result of the switch to a geometric weighting was a lower weighting to CPI components that were rising in price, and a higher weighting to those items dropping in price which led to lower reported inflation.  

According to John Williams

 
 

“…the net effect was to reduce reported CPI on an annual, or year-over-year basis, by 2.7% from what it would have been based on the traditional weighting methodology. The results have been dramatic. The compounding effect since the early-1990s has reduced annual cost of living adjustments in social security by more than a third.”

But the manipulation of the data did not stop there.  Aside from the weighting changes the BLS instituted a system of “hedonic” adjustments.  Hedonics adjusts the prices of goods for the increased pleasure the consumer derives from them.

 
 

“That new washing machine you bought did not cost you 20% more than it would have cost you last year, because you got an offsetting 20% increase in the pleasure you derive from pushing its new electronic control buttons instead of turning that old noisy dial, according to the BLS.

 

When gasoline rises 10 cents per gallon because of a federally mandated gasoline additive, the increased gasoline cost does not contribute to inflation. Instead, the 10 cents is eliminated from the CPI because of the offsetting hedonic thrills the consumer gets from breathing cleaner air. The same principle applies to federally mandated safety features in automobiles. I have not attempted to quantify the effects of questionable quality adjustments to the CPI, but they are substantial.”

Lastly, there is “intervention analysis” in the seasonal adjustment process.  Intervention analysis is critical to the highly volatile areas of food and energy.  When a commodity, like gasoline, goes through periods of violent price swings the BLS steps in and uses “intervention analysis” to smooth out the volatility.  As a result, sharply rising gasoline prices are never fully reflected in the reported headline inflation number.  However, declining prices, which are never adjusted, do show an impact to reducing inflation.

The obvious problem with these manipulations is it changed the measure of inflation from a cost-of-living adjustment to a reduction-of-living adjustment.  The original CPI calculation allowed individuals to understand the rate of return required on investments and incomes to maintain their current standard of living.  However, by artificially suppressing the rate of inflation, the future standard of living is reduced to lower levels. 

CPI-SGS-121812

 

The chart above shows the original calculation of inflation (which was based on a basket of goods), data sourced from John Williams, versus the current measure of CPI.  It is quite apparent that inflation, as reported by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), is understated by roughly 7% per year.

The deviation between the two measures is strictly due to the redefinitions of the series and adjustments to price measures utilized.  These changes to the CPI have detached the cost-of-living adjustments from the real cost-of-living experienced by those dependent upon a fixed income stream for survival.

According to John Williams: 

 
 

“In particular, changes made in CPI methodology during the Clinton Administration understated inflation significantly, and, through a cumulative effect with earlier changes that began in the late-Carter and early Reagan Administrations have reduced current social security payments by roughly half from where they would have been otherwise. That means Social Security checks today would be about double had the various changes not been made. In like manner, anyone involved in commerce, who relies on receiving payments adjusted for the CPI, has been similarly damaged. On the other side, if you are making payments based on the CPI (i.e., the federal government), you are making out like a bandit.”

This is why the average American has repeatedly lashed out at the current measure of inflation as it doesn’t represent the inflation rate that they are personally experiencing.   Rising food and energy costs are consuming more and more of a declining level of incomes.   For those individuals dependent on a fixed stream of welfare payments the lower rate of inflation adjustments, while putting more money in the coffers of the government, has led to a steadily declining standard of living for the elderly.

pce-foodandgas-wages-102912

The Chained CPI “Fiscal Cliff” Farce

In the latest attempt to save the economy from the “fiscal cliff” a grand bargain is being crafted that will possibly include a relic from the debt ceiling debate in 2011 called “Chained CPI.”  As with the Clinton Administration, once again the need to reduce government spending has given rise to a proposal to further suppress the measure of inflation to reduce the cost of living adjustments for social security recipients.   The issue with “Chained CPI,” as with the current measure of CPI, is that it will further misrepresent what the average consumer is living with from day to day.  

The Washington Post stated:

 
 

“Economics and policymakers generally make the assumption that when prices rise, people will turn to a less expensive product. They’ll buy chicken instead of more expensive beef, iceberg lettuce instead of arugula, store-brand, instead of name-brand cereal. The chained CPI attempts to account for how people react to inflated prices.

 

It’s an arcane detail in the ongoing budget debate, but the chained CPI is appealing to budget experts and some Republicans and Democrats, because it only slightly tweaks the inflation formula, while building significant savings over time, perhaps more than $100 billion over a decade.

 

Making such a change also means paying out less in Social Security benefits over time — something liberal Democrats can’t stomach. Imagine, for example, a person born in 1935 who retired to full benefits at age 65 in 2000. People in that position had an average initial monthly benefit of $1,435, or $17,220 a year, according to the Social Security Administration. Under the cost-of-living-adjustment formula and 2012 inflation, that benefit would be up to $1,986 a month in 2013, or $23,832 a year. But if payouts were adjusted using chained CPI, the sum would be around $1,880 a month, or $22,560 a year — a cut of more than 5 percent and more as the years go by.”

When it is known in advance that tweaking the math will create a “permanent” reduction in the measure of inflation then it is no longer an accurate assessment of inflationary pressures in the economy.  If adopted across the government, the change would have far-reaching effects on the many programs that are adjusted each year based on year-to-year changes in consumer prices.  

The groundswell of aging “boomers” that will are rapidly approaching the point of become welfare program recipients will find that the fixed stream of income payments will not be sufficient to maintain their current standard of living in the future.  This will continue to push an ever aging population into working much longer into their retirement years.

Furthermore, a side effect of artificially suppressing inflation is that taxes would slowly increase because annual adjustments to income tax brackets would be smaller.  This would eventually push more people into higher tax brackets allowing fewer people to be eligible for anti-poverty programs like Medicaid, food stamps and school lunches.  While the annual adjustments will eventually remove individuals from poverty on a statistical basis – it doesn’t mean that would be any more capable of supporting themselves.

Lastly, one reason why there has been such a disconnect between reported GDP, and the way that average Americans feel about the economy, is due to the way CPI affects the GDP calculation.  Although the CPI is not used in the actual GDP calculation, there are relationships with the price deflators used in converting GDP data and growth to inflation-adjusted numbers.  The more inflation is understated, the higher the inflation-adjusted rate of GDP growth that gets reported.  The problem is that real inflationary pricing pressures is simultaneously eroding the real prosperity of the average consumer. 

While going to “Chained CPI” will save the government over $100 billion during the next decade in payments to individuals – this is not a good thing for those dependent upon those payments.  Furthermore, the assumptions for budgeting will also be grossly flawed which means that when we get to the end of this decade it is likely that we will be in worse shape than was estimated.  Hopefully, those in Congress will opt not to further suppress the inflation calculation for political gain at the expense of the average American.

In the coming weeks ahead, in collaboration with my friend Doug Short, we will be introducing an inflation index which will be reconstructed along the same lines as the original form of CPI using an arithmetically weighted calculation on a fixed basket of goods.  It is hoped that from this experiment we can establish a baseline from which we may be able to ascertain the actual impact of the current environment on incomes, spending and the economy.  Stay tuned.

I’M SURE IT’S WRONG THIS TIME

6 comments

Posted on 14th December 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

Not one time in the last 50 years has this indicator dropped below 92 and the country not experienced a recession. But we all know Ben Bernanke and Obama have done away with recessions. Everyone knows that if you spend $1.4 trillion per year more than you bring in and print the money out of thin air to accomplish this feat, the economy can never go into recession. Trust these guys. When have they ever been wrong before? Keep telling yourself we’re not really in recession. I’m sure it will work.